Publication,

AI Guides: AI & copyright infringement

CN | EN
Current site :    CN   |   EN
Australia
China
China Hong Kong SAR
Japan
Singapore
United States
Global

Artificial intelligence (AI) systems can create music, paintings, poetry and books. Such systems have created works based on Dutch masters’ paintings, Kayne West rap lyrics and research texts about lithium-ion batteries.

Training AI systems using third party works may infringe the third party’s copyright. Both the inputs and outputs of an AI system have the potential to infringe.

DOWNLOAD PUBLICATION
AI & copyright infringement
Artificial intelligence (AI) systems can create music, paintings, poetry and books. Such systems have created works based on Dutch masters’ paintings, Kayne West rap lyrics and research texts about lithium-ion batteries.

Download

2.29MB, 4 Pages

LATEST THINKING
Insight
Data misuse and data breaches are the two core risks of data security. Data misuse can be prevented through strict legal regulations that ensure standardized data processing. compliance and regulatory-cybersecurity and data compliance,telecommunications media entertainment and technology-data protection and privacy

28 April 2025

Insight
On March 19, 2025, the Chinese Zhangjiagang Court ruled in a recent AIGC copyright infringement case Feng v. Dongshan Company that, the plaintiff's AI-generated pictures lacked enough original authorship to be copyrightable and that the prompts were not copyrightable either.[1] Unlike the previous AIGC copyrightability cases where the local Chinese courts recognized the original authorship in the AI-generated work, this is the first Chinese case under which AI-generated pictures were denied copyright protection.intellectual property-trademarks and copyright,digital economy,artificial intelligence

25 April 2025

Insight
On 28 November 2024, the newly amended Supervision Law of the People's Republic of China was adopted by the Standing Committee of China's National People's Congress (NPC) and is set to take effect on 1 June 2025. This amendment focuses on strengthening the oversight and restrictions on supervisory powers, with an emphasis on safeguarding citizens' rights. Dispute Resolution & Litigation-Compliance and Corporate Governance

21 April 2025